
by MASTERSEGARRA
If Chapter Ten explored integration and leading without possession, Chapter Eleven shifts our focus to something even more subtle:
What is not there is just as important as what is.
This chapter teaches the value of emptiness—the unseen, the space, the pause—and how true function comes not from what we add, but from what we allow.
For the Tang Soo Do practitioner, this is a profound lesson:
👉 Power is not just in movement… it is in the space between movements.
三十輻共一轂
當其無有車之用
埏埴以為器
當其無有器之用
鑿戶牖以為室
當其無有室之用
故有之以為利
無之以為用
Thirty spokes share the wheel’s hub;
It is the center hole that makes it useful.
Shape clay into a vessel;
It is the empty space that makes it useful.
Cut doors and windows to make a room;
It is the empty space that makes it livable.
Therefore:
What is there provides benefit,
But what is not there provides use.
Chapter Eleven teaches us:
👉 Emptiness is not nothing—it is potential.
We tend to focus on what we can see:
Techniques
Strength
Speed
Structure
But Lao Tzu reminds us:
👉 It is the space within these things that gives them meaning.
Without the empty hub, the wheel cannot turn.
Without the hollow cup, it cannot hold water.
Without space in a room, it cannot be lived in.
This chapter is a game-changer for martial artists who want to move beyond mechanical training.
Because in Tang Soo Do, what you don’t do is just as important as what you do.
In Hyung/Kata, students often focus only on:
The strike
The block
The stance
But what about:
The pause between movements?
The transition?
The breath between techniques?
👉 That “empty space” is where control is developed.
Without it:
Movements become rushed
Power becomes sloppy
Timing is lost
With it:
Technique becomes sharp
Energy is conserved
Flow is created
In sparring, beginners think success comes from doing more:
More punches
More kicks
More aggression
But advanced practitioners understand:
👉 Victory often comes from waiting.
The space between your opponent’s attack and your response…
That is where opportunity lives.
Too fast? You rush and miss.
Too slow? You hesitate and lose.
👉 Mastery is controlling the space in time.
“無之以為用”
(What is not there provides use.)
This applies directly to mindset.
A cluttered mind is full of:
Fear
Doubt
Overthinking
An empty mind is:
Calm
Aware
Responsive
This is the state we seek in:
Meditation
Sparring
Breaking
Everyday life
👉 You cannot react clearly if your mind is already full.
For instructors, this chapter is critical.
Many feel the need to constantly:
Correct
Talk
Demonstrate
Control
But the best instructors understand:
👉 Students need space to grow.
Space to:
Try
Fail
Adjust
Discover
If you fill every moment with instruction…
You remove the student’s ability to learn through experience.
Even the training space reflects this principle.
A crowded, chaotic environment creates:
Distraction
Confusion
Tension
A clean, open space creates:
Focus
Clarity
Calm
👉 The environment teaches before you even say a word.
This chapter challenges a deep belief:
That more effort equals more progress.
But Lao Tzu shows us:
👉 True efficiency comes from removing what is unnecessary.
In technique:
Remove excess movement
In mindset:
Remove unnecessary thoughts
In teaching:
Remove over-instruction
What remains is:
Clarity
Precision
Power
Most martial artists try to improve by adding more:
More drills
More techniques
More intensity
But growth often comes from subtraction:
Less tension
Less hesitation
Less noise
👉 The empty space is where mastery lives.
A punch is not just the fist…
It is the space it travels through.
A form is not just movement…
It is the rhythm between movements.
A warrior is not just action…
It is awareness within stillness.
👉 What you remove may be more important than what you add.
Continue your study of Tang Soo Do philosophy, history, and living practice:
👉 http://tangsoodoresource.com/